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EB-5 Evaluation and Decision Making

Is EB-5 Worth It? A Data Driven Analysis (2026) | EB5Status

By EB5 Status Editorial Team·11 min read·Updated 2026-03-19is EB-5 worth it
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The question "Is EB-5 worth it?" is fundamentally a cost benefit analysis. It requires quantifying what the investor pays (capital, fees, time, opportunity cost) and what the investor receives (permanent residency, work authorization, family benefits, eventual citizenship eligibility). The answer varies significantly based on the investor's nationality, available capital, timeline constraints, family situation, and alternative immigration options.

This analysis uses official USCIS data, published fee schedules, and documented processing timelines to present an objective framework for evaluating the EB-5 program's value proposition. We examine total costs, approval rates, processing realities, capital return statistics, and comparison to alternative pathways.

Important: Immigration law is complex and individual circumstances vary significantly. Consult a qualified immigration attorney for personalized guidance before making any visa application decision.

Last verified: 2026-03-19


Capital Investment#

The minimum EB-5 investment amounts, set by the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022, are:

Targeted Employment Area (TEA)$800,000Adjusts with inflation every 5 years
Standard (non-TEA)$1,050,000Adjusts with inflation every 5 years

These amounts represent "at risk" capital deployed into a new commercial enterprise. Unlike the Gold Card's non-refundable contribution, EB-5 capital is invested in a business with the expectation that it may be returned after immigration conditions are satisfied, typically 5 to 7 years after filing.

Source: EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022, 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(5). Blue trust tier.

Professional and Administrative Fees#

Beyond the capital investment, EB-5 petitioners incur substantial additional costs:

Immigration attorney fees$15,000 to $25,000I-526E, I-485, I-829 filings
Regional center administrative fee$50,000 to $75,000One-time fee charged by most RCs
USCIS filing fees (I-526E)$11,160Includes $4,010 Integrity Fund fee
USCIS filing fees (I-485)$1,440 per applicantAdjustment of status

Total additional fees: approximately $85,000 to $130,000 for a single applicant through a regional center. These fees are non-refundable regardless of petition outcome.

Source: USCIS Fee Schedule (effective April 2024); EB5Status survey of published regional center fee schedules. Blue trust tier (USCIS fees); Gray trust tier (professional fee estimates). See EB-5 Total Cost Breakdown for detailed analysis.

All In Cost Summary#

Regional Center (TEA)$800,000$85,000 to $130,000$885,000 to $930,000
Regional Center (Standard)$1,050,000$85,000 to $130,000$1,135,000 to $1,180,000
Direct Investment (TEA)$800,000$40,000 to $80,000$840,000 to $880,000

Direct investment typically involves lower administrative fees (no regional center fee) but higher legal complexity and the requirement to directly manage job creation.


I-526E Petition Approval Rates#

USCIS publishes quarterly data on I-526 and I-526E petition outcomes. Historical approval rates provide a meaningful indicator of program viability:

FY2020~87%Reduced volume (COVID)
FY2021~85%Continued reduced volume
FY2022~89%Post-RIA transition
FY2023~88%I-526E filings increasing

These approval rates indicate that the substantial majority of EB-5 petitions that are properly prepared and filed receive approval. Denial rates of 11% to 15% are not trivial, but they reflect cases with documented deficiencies (insufficient source of funds evidence, failure to meet job creation requirements, or other substantive issues) rather than arbitrary rejection.

Source: USCIS Quarterly I-526/I-526E Adjudication Reports. Blue trust tier. See EB-5 Denial Rates for analysis of common denial reasons.

I-829 Approval Rates#

The I-829 petition to remove conditions on permanent residency has historically shown even higher approval rates, typically exceeding 90%. This reflects the fact that most projects that receive I-526 approval successfully complete job creation requirements.

Source: USCIS I-829 Adjudication Data. Blue trust tier.


Current USCIS Processing Times#

As of March 2026, published USCIS processing times for EB-5 related forms are:

I-526E (new petition)37 months30 to 44 months
I-485 (adjustment of status)12 to 18 monthsAfter visa number available
I-829 (conditions removal)18 to 24 monthsAfter 2 year conditional period

The total processing timeline from I-526E filing to removal of conditions (permanent green card) spans approximately 7 to 9 years under current conditions, assuming no visa bulletin backlog. For investors from backlogged countries (China, India in unreserved categories), the total can extend substantially longer.

Source: USCIS Processing Times, March 2026. Blue trust tier. See Processing Times Dashboard for live data.

Impact of Concurrent Filing#

Since the RIA of 2022, EB-5 petitioners in the United States can concurrently file I-526E and I-485 if a visa number is immediately available. This provides work authorization (EAD) and travel permission (Advance Parole) while the petition is pending, which significantly improves quality of life during the multi-year processing period.

Source: EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022, concurrent filing provisions. Blue trust tier.


What the Data Shows#

One of the most consequential questions for EB-5 investors is whether their capital will be returned. The EB-5 program requires capital to be "at risk," meaning there is no guarantee of return. However, the program's structure anticipates that capital should be returned once immigration conditions are met.

Capital return outcomes vary significantly by project type and operator:

Regional center projects (loan model). The majority of EB-5 regional center investments use a loan structure, where investor capital is lent to a job creating entity (JCE) and repaid with interest over time. In projects that perform as planned, investors typically receive their capital back 5 to 7 years after filing, though some projects take longer.

Direct investments. Direct EB-5 investors deploy capital into their own business. Capital recovery depends entirely on the business's performance and is less predictable.

Project failures. A minority of EB-5 projects have resulted in partial or total capital loss. The most notable cases involve fraud (such as Jay Peak and certain CMB Regional Centers) or legitimate projects that failed economically. Investors should review project track records, financial projections, and independent assessments before committing capital.

Comprehensive, program wide capital return statistics are not published by USCIS, making precise aggregate analysis difficult. This is an area where investors must conduct project level due diligence rather than relying on program level averages.

Source: USCIS I-829 data; SEC enforcement actions; EB5Status analysis. Blue trust tier (USCIS data); Gray trust tier (capital return analysis).


What Else Could the Money Do?#

A rigorous "is it worth it" analysis must consider what the invested capital could earn in alternative deployments. For a TEA investment of $800,000:

Passive investment benchmark. If the $800,000 were invested in a diversified portfolio earning an average annual return of 7%, the capital would grow to approximately $1,125,000 over 5 years or $1,575,000 over 10 years. EB-5 investments typically generate minimal or no returns during the investment period, representing a significant opportunity cost.

Business investment alternative. The same capital deployed in a private business could generate operating income, equity appreciation, or both. However, this comparison is imperfect because the alternative business investment would not provide U.S. permanent residency.

Real estate comparison. In many investors' home countries, $800,000 could purchase significant real estate assets. However, foreign real estate does not confer U.S. immigration benefits.

The opportunity cost calculation depends heavily on the investor's discount rate and the value assigned to U.S. permanent residency itself. For investors who place high value on permanent residency (due to family, education, business, or security considerations), the opportunity cost may be acceptable. For investors who view permanent residency as a "nice to have" rather than a strategic necessity, the opportunity cost may be prohibitive.

Source: EB5Status analysis. Yellow trust tier (opportunity cost modeling involves assumptions).


EB-5 vs. Other Investment Immigration Options#

Capital Required$800,000$1,000,000$100,000 to $500,000No minimum
Capital RecoverablePotentially yesNo (non-refundable)In active businessN/A
Permanent ResidencyYesYesNo (temporary only)Yes
Job Creation10 full time jobsNoneSome employeesManage U.S. staff

EB-5 advantages over alternatives: direct path to permanent residency (unlike E-2); capital potentially recoverable (unlike Gold Card); no nationality restriction (unlike E-2); no existing company required (unlike EB-1C).

EB-5 disadvantages: highest total cost among temporary visa options; longest processing time; job creation requirement adds complexity and risk; capital at risk of loss.

Source: INA Sections 203(b)(5), 101(a)(15)(E), 203(b)(1)(C); USCIS published guidance. Blue trust tier. See EB-5 vs Other Immigration Paths for detailed comparison.


Based on the data, EB-5 provides the strongest value proposition for:

Investors from non-treaty countries. Nationals of countries without E-2 treaties (including India and China) have fewer alternative investment based pathways, making EB-5's value proposition comparatively stronger.

Families with children. EB-5 includes derivative visas for spouses and unmarried children under 21. For a family of four, the per person cost of permanent residency through EB-5 ranges from approximately $220,000 to $290,000, which compares favorably to per person costs of other family immigration strategies.

Investors facing employment based backlogs. Professionals from India and China who face decade long waits in the EB-2 or EB-3 categories may find that EB-5 (particularly in set-aside categories) offers a faster path to permanent residency.

High net worth individuals seeking flexibility. EB-5 permanent residents have unrestricted work authorization, can live anywhere in the United States, and can travel freely. For investors who value these freedoms, the cost may be justified.


Investors with limited capital reserves. If the EB-5 investment represents the majority of available liquid assets, the at risk nature of the investment creates unacceptable financial exposure. Prudent financial planning suggests that EB-5 capital should represent a fraction, not the majority, of total net worth.

Individuals who need immediate U.S. access. EB-5 processing times of 3 to 4 years (and longer for backlogged countries) make the program unsuitable for urgent relocation needs.

Investors unwilling to accept capital risk. Despite high approval rates, EB-5 capital is not guaranteed to be returned. Investors who cannot tolerate the possibility of capital loss should explore alternative pathways.

Applicants with complex source of funds histories. Investors whose capital originates from multiple sources, involves complex corporate structures, or raises documentation challenges face higher RFE rates and should budget for extensive legal preparation.


  1. Total all in cost: $885,000 to $1,180,000 depending on TEA status and project type, including approximately $85,000 to $130,000 in non-refundable fees.

  2. Approval rates are strong: I-526E approval rates of approximately 86% to 89% demonstrate that properly prepared petitions succeed at high rates.

  3. Processing takes years: Current I-526E processing is 30 to 44 months. Total timeline to permanent residency is 7 to 9 years minimum (longer with visa backlogs).

  4. Capital return is project dependent: No program wide guarantee exists. Due diligence on the specific project is essential.

  5. Opportunity cost is real: EB-5 capital generates minimal returns during the investment period. Investors should evaluate what alternative deployments would yield.

  6. Value depends on individual circumstances: EB-5 is most clearly "worth it" for families from non-treaty countries who face employment based backlogs and place high value on permanent residency.

For current processing times, visa bulletin dates, and cost modeling, visit the EB5Status Processing Times Dashboard and Cost Calculator.

Disclaimer: This article presents factual data and analysis about the EB-5 program. It does not constitute legal or financial advice. Consult an immigration attorney and financial advisor for personalized guidance regarding your specific situation.


Data sources: USCIS I-526/I-526E Adjudication Reports, USCIS Processing Times (March 2026), USCIS Fee Schedule (April 2024), EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022. Trust tiers: Blue (official government), Gray (derived analysis), Yellow (opportunity cost estimates).

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